Whether your first or fifth business sale, the fundamentals remain the same.
1. Determine the value of your company.
A third-party valuation can provide a realistic estimate of what your business is worth. For a fee, often ranging from $5,000 to $20,000, a qualified valuation professional can review a business and its competitive environment. The review typically considers everything from sales to receivables, inventories and other assets, as well as outstanding debt or liens, all with the goal of identifying business threats and opportunities that define value. Small businesses are typically worth two to six times their annual cash flow (not revenue amount) depending on their overall financial health, industry trends, market demand, location and other variables.
2. Clean up your small business financials.
Today, prospective buyers want as much transparency as possible, and they are performing more careful due diligence, kicking the tires on everything from a business’ financials to its real estate and equipment. A seller can avoid losing a deal by working with a financial specialist (not their accountant) to present defendable financial statements and other analysis. Sellers should also prepare to supply business tax returns dating back at least three years, and ensuring that all income is accurately reported.
3. Prepare your exit strategy in advance.
All too often, an unexpected factor—an aging or ill owner, lack of interest in succession from adult children, a competitive threat such as the arrival of a big-box store—forces small business owners to sell. So if you plan to outlast your competitors, prepare your exit strategy now, before such a situation forces a sale, says Ed Knox, founder of White Plains, N.Y.-based Yarmouth Venture Group, an advisory to investors looking to invest in small businesses. Among Knox’s favorite selling strategies is one that is often overlooked: having a trusted employee take over the business. “He’s on the inside, knows all the customers, knows all the skeletons in the closet,” says Knox. If you do sell to an industry outsider, “there needs to be sufficient transition time so the new owner will feel comfortable with the industry,” he says.
4. Boost your sales.
Buyers want to see businesses with some upside, says Todd Cushing, principal at EBIT Associates, an intermediary in Barrington, Ill., that works on retainer to help small to mid-size companies prepare for sales and identify buyers. “When sales are declining, that’s not when to sell,” he cautions. Cushing adds that buyers might also get skittish if a single customer represents more than 20 percent of revenue, putting sales at risk if that business is lost. If necessary, he says, diversify the customer base or jumpstart sales with increased marketing and promotions. While you’re at it, push out bloated inventories and get operating systems up to date. Retail establishments might warrant a fresh coat of paint and some new fixtures, while restaurants might update their menus and say goodbye to disagreeable staff. Overall, Cushing says to ask yourself: “What do you have to do to get your sales to increase?”
5. Find a business broker.
You might be a terrific widget maker but a lousy salesman. That’s one of many reasons to consider outside help with a sale. For companies with less than $5 million in annual revenue, “help” usually means enlisting a business broker who will charge a commission of 5 to 10 percent of the sale price. In this case, the broker often performs the business valuation. He or she then prepares a prospectus and taps into a large network to locate buyers, including listing the business with suitable marketplaces, and applies a background in deal-making to get the best price. Brokers can also steer buyers to financing resources. That’s how Jessica Fialkovich and her husband got more than $600,000—around their asking price—for the premium wine retail business they sold in 2012. “Our lawyer said he could structure the deal, but he didn’t know how to find a buyer,” says Fialkovich, who is now a business broker in Denver. “The hardest part of the business deal is going through the due diligence. That’s typically where deals fall apart and the broker provides the most value.”
6. Pre-qualify your buyers.
The vast majority of small business transactions are paid for in part by third-party loans, with many backed by the U.S. Small Business Administration, says Rohit Arora, founder of Biz2Credit, a small business online-lending platform that matches borrowers to lenders for business transactions, including acquisitions. A major reason many deals fall through, he says, is because sellers enter transactions with buyers who are unable to secure financing. “Always pre-qualify your buyers,” Arora says, and “don’t get overexcited” by an offer. In most deals, Arora says, banks will also want the sellers to provide a portion of financing for the transaction; this ensures the seller has a vested interest in the venture’s ongoing success under new ownership. And the new owner should fit into the company culture, says Bill Balderaz. Several advertising agencies approached Balderaz’s Columbus, Ohio-based digital marketing company before it closed a deal with Fathom, a much larger firm with similar expertise, in July 2011. “From the first phone call, it was clear this was the right venture to pursue,” Balderaz says of Fathom. “The trust factor was there immediately, and that’s why it worked so quickly.”
7. Get business contracts in order.
There are a host of legal considerations when selling a small business. Among those necessary to close the deal is the asset purchase agreement, the legal contract for the sale and the purchase of the business assets, including physical as well as intellectual property, says Harry Styron, an attorney in Ozark, Mo., who provides legal advice to small business buyers and sellers. This comprehensive document—typically 25 to 50 pages long—will consist of exhibits such as noncompete agreements, asset listings, employee agreements and guidelines for the use of website domain names. It does not account for the sale of any stock. “The hardest part is collecting the information,” says Styron, whose fees typically run from $750 to $1,500 for a basic asset purchase agreement.
Often deals will stipulate that the prior owner remain in an advisory capacity for a set period of time to ensure a smooth transition. That’s what happened when entrepreneur Meghan Connolly Haupt sold her Oakland, Calif.-based jewelry business, Sulusso.com last year. Connolly Haupt agreed to consult with the new owner for one year. “You have to have a term of overlap where you’re helping that business, but you want to make that term as short as possible,” she says.
Excepts from an Article written by Deborah Cohen.
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